Title: The SHA and health accounts data collection
1 The SHA and health accounts data collection
- David Morgan
- OECD Health Division
- Systems of Health Accounting
- Belgian Experience in an International
Perspective - Take-off Seminar for a Research Project
- Brussels, 12/03/07
2Overview of presentation
- Background to SHA Development
- Joint OECD-Eurostat-WHO Health Accounts (SHA)
Data Collection - Dissemination of SHA data at OECD
- Methodological development
3Why has A System of Health Accounts (SHA) been
developed?
- OECD has built up, over 20 years, the leading
international database on health care systems
financing and delivery - based on collaboration
with national data correspondents - Until 2000, however, OECD Health Data presented
health expenditure data reported by member
countries according to their national practice - To improve availability and comparability of
health expenditure data, OECD Ad Hoc Meeting of
Experts in Health Statistics (May 1996) advised
to develop an international standard for health
care expenditure and financing
4Main problems hindering comparability of pre-SHA
health expenditure statistics
- Differences in boundaries of health sector limit
the comparability of total health expenditure - Institutional (provider) structure (in itself) is
not suitable for comparison across countries - From a national health policy perspective data
on spending by provider do not provide adequate
information about changes in utilisation of
resources
5Basic features of the System of Health Accounts
- International statistical standard (an integrated
system of comprehensive and internationally
comparable accounts and basic accounting rules) - Functional definition of health care goods and
services - ICHA (1.0) International Classification for
Health Accounting - Functions of health care services and goods
(ICHA-HC) - Categories of providers (health care industries)
(ICHA-HP) - Sources of funding (financing agents) (ICHA-HF)
- Standard SHA tables cross-classify expenditures
under the three basic dimensions
6Major requirements for applying the SHA boundaries
- The functional classification of health care
(ICHA-HC) is applied in an internationally
harmonised way (e.g., LTC) - Expenditure by all the financing agents defined
by the SHA is accounted for (e.g., HF.2.4
HF.2.5) - All primary and secondary providers of health
care are included (HP.7) - Foreign trade of health services is estimated
(HP.9) - Common methods for valuation of health services
are applied following the SHA framework
7First results of comparative analysis of
SHA-based National Health Accounts
- Eva Orosz and David Morgan SHA-based National
Health Accounts in Thirteen OECD Countries A
Comparative Analysis, OECD Health Working Papers
No 16, OECD, 2004 (HWP No. 16) - Country Studies OECD Health Technical Papers No.
1 to 13 SHA-based National Health Accounts in
Thirteen OECD Countries Country Studies (HTP)
8SHA provides a more in-depth picture of the role
of public and private spending on health care
- The fact that the whole health care system is
primarily publicly financed does not entail that
public financing plays the dominant role in every
area. - In only four of the thirteen countries covered
in the OECD HWP No.16, namely Denmark, Germany,
Japan and Spain, does the public sector play a
dominant role in all three main areas
9SHA provides in-depth information on the
multi-functionality of hospitals
- The study shows
- Hospital expenditure is not appropriate proxy
for in-patient care - Considerable variation in the share of in-patient
curative-rehabilitative care in hospital
expenditure - Hospitals provide Long-term care to a varying
degree across countries - Different roles of hospitals providing
out-patient care
10Major challenges in applying ICHA-HC
- Defining more precisely the boundary between
health and social care - Defining more precisely the boundary between
health and health related functions (e.g.,
education, research, environmental health, etc.) - Separating health, health-related and non-health
activities in the case of complex institutions - Applying functional classification in the case of
multi-functional health care organisations (e.g.,
inpatient care, day care, outpatient care within
hospitals) - Treatment of ancillary services (laboratories,
diagnostic centres) provided in complex health
care organisations
11Major challenges in implementing ICHA-HF
- Estimating private expenditure
- Data on private sector expenditure (private
insurance, NGOs, corporations) far from complete. - Household surveys tend to underestimate private
health spending - Household surveys only provide less detailed
functional distribution than is needed by the SHA
12Major challenges in applying ICHA-HP
- To estimate the expenditure on health care
activities by complex institutions that perform
health, health-related and non-health activities
at the same time - Nursing and residential-care facilities (HP.2)
may provide HC.3 HC.2 HC.R.6.1, HC.R.6.9 and
non-health services - Public health authorities (HP.5) may provide
HC.6 HC.R.4 HC.R.5 etc. - Medical universities may provide HC.1HC.2
HC.R.2, HC.R.3
13Growing expectations for implementation and
further development of the SHA
- What information can/should SHA-based health
accounts provide for policy-makers? - Factors that drive growth in health spending
- Differences across countries in expenditure
growth and composition of expenditure - Monitor the effects of particular health reform
measures over time - How services are utilised by regional and social
groups in the population
14Status of SHA implementation in OECD countries as
of October 2006
Data have been (or will be) provided to the 2006 Joint Health Accounts data collection Intention to report data for the 2007 Joint Health Accounts data collection Data not expected for the 2007 data collection
Australia, Belgium, Canada, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Japan, Korea, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Slovak Republic, Spain, Switzerland, United States /partial reporting of HC Austria, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Hungary, Turkey. SHA implementation planned or currently underway Greece, Ireland, Italy, New Zealand, Sweden, Break in SHA implementation Mexico, United Kingdom
15Why SHA implementation has proved slower than
envisaged?
- Implementation of the SHA (i.e., a new system)
requires - Political commitment
- Clear institutional responsibility with
additional human resources - Changes in statistical approach
- Changes in data processing (and often in data
gathering) - Co-operation among several organisations
16SHA activity at OECD
- 2000 publication of A System of Health Accounts
- 2000-2003 SHA tables collected on an occasional
basis for presentation at the annual experts
meeting - 2004 - Working Paper and 13 Technical Papers
published - 2005 SHA pilot SHA data collection (SHA tables
received from 10 OECD countries - 2005 agreement on joint OECD-EUROSTAT-WHO SHA
questionnaire for 2006 collection
17THE 2006 JOINT OECD-EUROSTAT-WHO HEALTH ACCOUNTS
(SHA) DATA COLLECTION
- Development and Evaluation
18Purposes of the joint SHA data collection
- The most important goal is to reduce the burden
of data collection for the national authorities - Increase the use of international standards and
definitions - Further harmonisation across national health
accounting practices in order to improve
availability and comparability of health
expenditure data - Encouraging SHA Implementation
- Quality of data depends primarily on
contributions by member countries
19Documents of the Questionnaire
- Summary of the Practical working arrangements for
co-operation between OECD, EUROSTAT and WHO - Questionnaire to be completed
- Tables
- Methodology
- Technical notes
- Structure of the classifications and tables
- Additional descriptions and definitions used in
the Joint Questionnaire
20Dimensions of expenditure in the Joint
Questionnaire
Source of funding
Financing schemes/ agents
Service providers
Functions
Human Resources
21Methodological information requested
- I. Data sources
- II. Correspondence tables between health
expenditure categories used in national practice
and the ICHA - III. Current state of ICHA implementation
- Which deviations from ICHA are currently found in
the countrys SHA compilation - Estimation procedures and adjustments
22JHAQ data availability in 2006
- 21 countries (16 OECD 5 EU non-OECD) had
submitted data 19 by end-May and 2 additional
countries in September - Current expenditure complete at 1-digit level and
at 2-digit level - complete for HF
- on average two thirds for HC HP
- Few countries provided the new entries HFxFS,
RCxHP (total spending on pharmaceuticals, human
resources, capital spending by provider),
information on public/private ownership
23Main results of the revision process
- Considerable improvement of SHA-based data
availability - 21 (165) of 38 OECD and/or EU countries provided
data by September - More detailed SHA tables than before
- Several countries have (re-)started the
implementation /preparation for SHA
implementation - Preliminary analysis suggests improvement in
comparability of data - More standard use of SHA to generate estimates of
total health expenditure - Greater harmonisation in applying ICHA
- However, deviations from ICHA still remain and
needs for SHA revision more evident
24Implications for comparative analysis of data
- Initial focus on main aggregates and
sub-aggregates - Total expenditure on health
- Total expenditure on personal care
- Total expenditure on collective care
- Total current expenditure
- Total expenditure capital spending
- Total expenditure on health financed by the
general government - Total expenditure on health financed by the
social security - Total expenditure on health privately funded
- Total expenditure on health through private
insurance - Total expenditure on health through OOPS
25Next steps to improve the process
- Use of improved tools and more clear indications
(tables, explanatory notes, etc) - Clearer and standard process to review the data
- Reduction of the time required in the validation
process - increase of the involved resources in the
international organisations - improved compliance with the schedule
26OECD dissemination of SHA data
- Health Accounts database via internet with access
only through authorisation - Health Accounts tables (country specific and
comparative) via A System of Health Accounts
Implementation web-page - Short country-specific notes (Country-profiles)
via web-page - Comparative analysis (OECD Health Working Papers)
- Country-specific analysis (OECD Health Technical
Papers)
27SHA Implementation in OECD Countrieswww.oecd.or
g/health/sha
28Standard SHA Tables by country
29Comparative Tables/Charts (1)
Source 2006 Joint OECD-Eurostat-WHO Health
Accounts (SHA) Data Collection
30Comparative Tables/Charts (2)
Source 2006 Joint OECD-Eurostat-WHO Health
Accounts (SHA) Data Collection
31Comparative Tables/Charts (3)
Source 2006 Joint OECD-Eurostat-WHO Health
Accounts (SHA) Data Collection
32Link between SHA and OECD Health Data
- OECD Health Data is the main dissemination
product of Financial and non-financial data from
OECD Health Division - Collection runs concurrently with Joint SHA
Collection with overlapping networks - Data from Joint Collection compatible with OECD
Health Data (and Health at a Glance)
33Preliminary data from Belgian SHA included in
OECD Health Data 2006
34The System of Health Accounts
- Methodological Development
35General aims of Health Accounting developmental
work
- The basic methodological framework of SHA has
become widely accepted - On the other hand
- The SHA Manual and the International
Classification for Health Accounts (ICHA) require
some refinement and further extension - to improve comparability of health expenditure
- to better contribute to the evaluation of health
systems performance - to better present the importance of health sector
within the national economy
36SHA developmental work in 2007-2008 OECD Draft
Programme of Work on Health
- Second edition of the SHA Manual is expected to
better fulfil the requirements of international
comparability and to enhance the analytical
power of the SHA, through a - a refined conceptual framework
- a revised version of the International
Classification for Health Accounts - improved methods and more detailed guidance
37Key issues to be addressed
- Main factors limiting international
comparability - Differences in boundaries of the health sector
(e.g., in definition of Long-term care) - Differences in applying the functional
classification (e.g., separation of inpatient
care, day care, outpatient care within hospitals) - Lack of reliable price indices in national
statistics. - For international comparison, health expenditure
are deflated by economy-wide (GDP) price indices
38Key issues to be addressed (cont.)
- Lack of reliable health-specific Purchasing Power
Parities (PPPs) - economy-wide PPPs are used
- The current categories of health care financing
(ICHA-HF) do not enable an adequate reflection of
the complex and changing systems of health
financing - Reliability and comparability of private
expenditure requires improvement
39Key issues to be addressed (cont.)
- The SHA Manual 1.0 does not provide guidance to
estimate expenditure by age and gender groups,
and disease categories - The SHA Manual does not distinguish appropriately
between the production and the final consumption
of health services - Review of 2- and 3-digit categories from the
point of view of international comparability and
policy relevance - Experts in member countries will be invited to
propose further issues for consideration
40Main components of SHA developmental work in
2007-2008
- Refinement of ICHA, including Guidelines for LTC
- Estimating Expenditure by Disease, Age and Gender
under the System of Health Accounts (SHA)
Framework - Refinement of the SHA framework for health
financing HA(2006)7 - Improving the comparability and availability of
private health expenditure - Development of reliable health-specific
Purchasing Power Parities (PPPs) - Incorporating Input, Output and Productivity
Measurement into the SHA Framework - Strengthening the connection between the SHA and
the SNA HA(2006)6
41Involvement of national experts is indispensable
- A wider circle of experts will be invited to
participate in reviewing particular chapters of
SHA 1.0 - Ad hoc meetings
- The Meetings of Health Accounts Experts is
considered as the main professional forum to
discuss interim reports and drafts - SHA Electronic Discussion Group (SHA EDG) is
expected to facilitate discussions in a wider
circle
42Thank you!
- Sandra.Hopkins_at_oecd.org
- Eva.Orosz_at_oecd.org
- David.Morgan_at_oecd.org
- Roberto.Astolfi_at_oecd.org
- www.oecd.org/health/sha